Let's Go to Bed" is a song by English rock band the Cure, released as a stand-alone single by Fiction Records in November 1982. In the aftermath of the dark Pornography, Robert Smith returned from a month-long detox in the Lake District to write the song, the antithesis to what the Cure currently represented. It was later included on the album Japanese Whispers.

Let’s Go To Bed’ is probably the only contrived record we’ll ever make because it was designed to break the mold of what the Cure had become, which I thought was very static and stagnant so I wanted to attract a new audience and make everybody young again. Smith explained he wrote the song to be intentionally bad: After having finished Pornography, I went camping in the Lake District – partly to get rid of my alcohol and drugs abuse. At that time I got the idea of writing the most cynically commercial song I could. Which turned out to be Let’s Go To Bed, which was garbage. When I wrote Let’s Go To Bed, I thought it was stupid. It’s rubbish, it’s a joke. All pop songs are basically saying ‘please go to bed with m. So I’m going to make it as blatant as possible, set it to this cheesy synth riff – everything I hated about music at that time.

Doo doo doo doo Doo doo doo doo. Let me take your hand I'm shaking like milk Turning Turning blue All over the windows and the floors Fires outside in the sky Look as perfect as cats The two of us Together again But it's just the same A stupid game. But I don't care if you don't And I don't feel if you don't And I don't want it if you don't And I won't say it If you won't say it first.